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Source: http://twitter.com/bilalr/statuses/152419995928887299

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County church burglar caught

??? WAHOO ? An arrest has been made in a recent string of church burglaries.

??? Saunders County Sheriff Kevin Stukenholtz reported that Dustin Robbins, 26, of Wahoo was arrested on Dec. 22 in Wahoo.

??? Robbins was arrested on a felony forgery warrant from Douglas County. Stukenholtz noted that the circumstances of that forgery clearly tied Robbins to the December church burglaries in Saunders County.

??? Robbins allegedly took Salvation Army vouchers from one of the churches and attempted to cash them at a business in Omaha by forging the pastor?s signature.

??? ?We?d been in contact with Douglas County and worked with them in order to get an arrest made,? said Stukenholtz.

??? Stukenholtz said another significant point of the arrest was that the county made use of the United States Marshals Fugitive Task force, of which Saunders County Sheriff?s Deputy Joe Smaus is a member. Because he is a member, the county has access not only to the task force, but many of the U.S. Marshals? other fugitive apprehension resources.

??? ?Thanks to his involvement, we were able to make use of their resources,? said Stukenholtz. ?That?s the benefit we?re seeing from having someone involved in that task force.?

??? While the forgery charge was the only one made against Robbins as of late last week, Stukenholtz said his department had reason to believe Robbins could also be tied to other residential burglaries in Saunders County.

??? At least eight burglaries were believed to have occurred in Saunders County churches between Dec. 5 and Dec. 14. Communities impacted by the church burglaries included Ceresco, Ithaca, Wahoo, Mead and Colon.

??? In these burglaries, the thief broke into the churches in the overnight hours and rummaged thought the building, apparently searching for cash.

??? Stukenholtz added that Robbins might also be tied to other residential burglaries in the area and was, at the time of his arrest, out on bond in connection to another burglary charge.

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The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of omahanewsstand.com.

We encourage your feedback and dialog, all comments will be reviewed by our Web staff before appearing on the Web site.

Source: http://omahanewsstand.com/articles/2011/12/29/the_ashland_gazette/news/doc4efb8c9509e42981128055.txt

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As North Korea mourns, its neighbor shrugs

Adrienne Mong

All was quiet on the Demilitarized Zone on the Korean Peninsula on the Kim Jong Il's state funeral took place.

By Adrienne Mong, NBC News

SEOUL, South Korea ? As one journalist put it, it said how much we all knew about North Korea that for the better part of Wednesday morning, most of the world remained in the dark about just when ? if at all? ? the state funeral for the country's late leader Kim Jong Il had begun.?

But finally around 2 p.m in Seoul, a feed of the funeral proceedings began transmitting.?We watched online, impressed by the staging and the direction.?


Thousands of people in olive drab stood under snowfall in front of the Kumsusan Memorial Palace ? where Kim Jong Il?s body had been lying in state and where that of his father Kim Il Sung is also housed ? as a procession of vehicles drove past, including the hearse led by Kim Jong Il's son and successor, Kim Jong Un.

Under a dramatic soundtrack and the emotion-laden voice of a North Korean broadcaster, the continuous wailing of mourners could be heard.?Cameras pushed into close-ups of rows and rows of men and women in military uniform sobbing.?

As the procession wound its way through Pyongyang and the snowfall grew heavier, footage of civilians began to appear.? Dressed in thick winter coats, they craned their necks and covered their mouths as they wept.? Those in the front ? closest to the cameras ?jumped up and down with great emotion.? Occasionally, a row of soldiers appeared expressionless and stoic.

Wednesday's state funeral for North Korean dictator Kim Jong Il capped more than a week of public mourning. NBC's Adrienne Mong reports.

As the video was broadcast ? and despite the "live" banner on some cable stations, it was still unclear whether the footage was being transmitted live or had been recorded earlier until one news agency confirmed it was indeed the former.

The mood in Seoul was decidedly different.

'Like father, like son'
Among a small community of North Koreans who fled their homeland years ago, there was scorn for the man they once called their "Dear Leader" and a touch of hope that his death may usher in long-awaited change.

"Kim Jong Il made three million people starve to death," said Kim Jung-geum, a reporter and radio announcer with Free North Korea Radio.? She escaped from the North eight years ago and has been living in Seoul for the past six years.

"Initially I thought, wow, now we can go home. But the feeling didn?t last even a day," said Kim Sung-min, founder of the station ?which broadcasts a one-hour shortwave radio program back into the North every day.??

"It is the third generation leadership," said Kim, who defected from North Korea?11 years ago.?"Like father, like son.? There is no hope.?There is zero per cent chance of change as Kim Jong Un inheried Kim Jong Il's system."

Adrienne Mong

The streets of Seoul suggested it was business as usual in South Korea as Kim Jong Il's state funeral was held.

His colleague was willing to be a bit more optimistic.? "The dictatorship is over," said Kim Jung-geum quietly.? "A new era will begin with 2012.? I expect that."

Both of them, however, did agree on one thing.? They remembered when North Korean founder Kim Il Sung died.

"I was so sad that I skipped two meals," recalled Kim Sung-min, who was serving in the North Korean military in a northern province at the time.? "It was as if the sun had fallen to earth."

"I cried for Kim Il Sung," said Kim Jung-geum, who was a propaganda teacher at the time.? "We had a food ration system.? People had salaries then.? So I genuinely grieved for his death."

Among South Koreans there was largely indifference.

A trio of college students said they were initially worried about the possible ramifications of Kim Jong Il?s death.? "But now I feel a lot better," said Lee Kyung-min, more keen on visiting a nearby museum than thinking about regional security. None of them were interested in the funeral proceedings.

"It was big news," said Cho Nam-hyun, a reporter for Dong-A Ilbo. "But personally, I think of it just as a head of state who died."

The indifference doesn't come as a surprise to analysts in South Korea.?

"We've been living under the gun for the past?60 years," said Dr. Hahm Chaibong, president of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies.? "You can?t count the number of crises that we've had over the years.??Be it assassinations, commando raids, downing of airplanes, terrorist bombings, and of course more recently nuclear experiments and shelling of islands."

Hahm also offered a final somber thought.

"By and large everyone has learned a lesson as far as to what to expect," he said.? "Everybody knows that there isn?t all that much to expect in terms of radical change?.? If North Korea is going to change, it's not going to because of something we do in the outside world.? They will be the ones who will be undertaking changes because they think it's necessary and because they decide it's time they do it."

Follow NBC News' Adrienne Mong (@adriennemong)?on Twitter.

Source: http://worldblog.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/12/28/9756833-as-north-korea-mourns-its-neighbor-shrugs

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British training 'Xbox generation' soldiers with tweaked games

Austerity means the military can't afford the big-budget training exercises to battle-harden new recruits, so it's relying more on computer simulations. Sadly, Virtual Battlespace 2 can't compete with the Hollywood-style excitement of Modern Warfare. That's why it's buying in game engines from the studios (VB2 was based on tech licensed from the makers of Operation Flashpoint) and cutting out the unrealistic physics -- such as rifle bullets flying three miles and vehicles that don't obey gravity. It's hoped the project will keep the attention of death-match hardened trainees and encourage them to play it in their own time: the team were told that two soldiers learned enough skills to stay alive during combat thanks to marathon sessions in the game. If you've just unwrapped an FPS for the holidays, you can now tell disapproving family members that it's educational.

British training 'Xbox generation' soldiers with tweaked games originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 29 Dec 2011 14:51:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceThe Guardian  | Email this | Comments

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/29/british-training-xbox-generation-soldiers-with-tweaked-games/

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বৃহস্পতিবার, ২৯ ডিসেম্বর, ২০১১

Samuel S. Epstein: Multiple Carcinogens in Johnson & Johnson's Baby Shampoo

The Campaign for Safe Cosmetics must be congratulated for securing a 11/15/11 agreement with Johnson & Johnson "for reducing or gradually phasing out trace amounts of potentially cancer-causing chemicals" from Baby Shampoo, "one of its signature products." However, this agreement is limited and restricted to the U.S. market.

There are three carcinogenic ingredients in Johnson & Johnson's Baby Shampoo, dioxane, formaldehyde and nitrosamine. Dioxane is a well-recognized carcinogenic contaminant in alcohol ethoxylates, a group of four ingrediens -- laureths, oleths, polyethylene glycol and polysorbates. The second ingredient, quaternium, is a precursor of two carcinogens, formaldehyde and nitrosamine. Johnson & Johnson has committed to "reducing or gradual phasing out" dioxane and formaldehyde in their U.S., but not in their international, products. A third carcinogen, not recognized by the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics, is nitrosamine, also of quaterniums, besides other precursors.

However limited, Johnson & Johnson's response is in sharp and disturbing contrast to the silence of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). This federal agency has still failed to enforce the explicit requirements of the 1938 Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act. This directs the FDA to require that "the label of a cosmetic product shall bear a warning statement to prevent a health hazard that may be associated with the product."

The regulatory failure of the FDA extends to its failure to respond to the Cancer Prevention Coalition's extensively-documented 1996 Citizen Petition "Seeking A Cancer Warning On Cosmetic Products Containing (the carcinogen) Diethanolamine." FDA's regulatory failure extends still further to the Coalition's 2008 Petition, "Seeking A (ovarian) Cancer Warning On Talc Products Used By Premenopausal for Women's Genital Dusting." Both petitions, endorsed by leading cancer prevention experts, requested the FDA to ban or suspend approval of these products, which still pose an "imminent hazard," or minimally to require their labeling with a "caution" or other such warning. However, the FDA has still failed to respond.

Concerns on the cancer risks of talc, dioxane, formaldehyde, nitrosamine and ethylene oxide, besides other prohibited and restricted carcinogenic ingredients in cosmetics and personal care products, are not new. They were detailed in my 2001 "Unreasonable Risk: How To Avoid Cancer From Cosmetics and Personal Care Products," and 2009 "Healthy Beauty" books.

As published in the Feb. 25, 2011 Science Insider editorial, "Advancing Regulatory Science," FDA Commissioner Dr. Hamburg claimed that FDA's regulations must be based on "better predictive models -- functional genomics, proteomics, and metabolomics," rather than "high dose animal [carcinogenicity] studies -- unchanged for decades."

Dr. Hamburg's dismissal of standard carcinogenicity tests is bizarre. Their scientific validity has been endorsed by other federal regulatory agencies, the National Toxicology Program, the International Agency for Research on Cancer, besides the April 2010 President's Cancer Panel. Furthermore, as stipulated in the 1938 Federal Food Drug and Cosmetic Act, the FDA is charged with regulating food, drugs and cosmetics based on standard toxicology and carcinogenicity tests. Moreover, the FDA is not charged with, let alone capable of developing irrelevant "tests that incorporate the mechanistic underpinnings of disease."

As warned by Senator Edward Kennedy at the 1997 Senate Hearings on the FDA Reform Bill, "The cosmetics industry has borrowed a page from the playbook of the tobacco industry by putting profits ahead of public health." This warning remains current.

Samuel S. Epstein, M.D. is professor emeritus of Environmental and Occupational Medicine at the University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health; Chairman of the Cancer Prevention Coalition; and former President of the Rachel Carson Trust. His awards include the 1998 Right Livelihood Award and the 2005 Albert Schweitzer Golden Grand Medal for International Contributions to Cancer Prevention. He is the author of over 270 scientific articles and 20 books on the causes and prevention of cancer, including the Unreasonable Risk Book: How To Avoid Cancer from Cosmetics and Personal Care Products, The Neways Story (2001, Environmental Toxicology), the groundbreaking The Politics of Cancer (1979, Doubleday Books), Healthy Beauty (2010, BenBella Books), and National Cancer Institute And American Cancer Society: Criminal Indifference to Cancer Prevention and Conflicts of Interest (2011, Xlibris Publishing).

CONTACT:
Samuel S. Epstein, M.D.
Chairman, Cancer Prevention Coalition
Professor emeritus Environmental & Occupational Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago School of Public Health
Email: epstein@uic.edu
www.preventcancer.com

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Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/samuel-s-epstein/johnson-baby-shampoo_b_1151807.html

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US teen, 2 others found dead in western Mexico (AP)

MEXICO CITY ? The body of a U.S. teenager was found in the trunk of a burned-out car in western Mexico along with the bodies of two other youths, prosecutors said Tuesday.

An employee of the state prosecutors' office in Michoacan state said the car holding the remains of the three young men was found on the side of a rural road on Christmas Eve. The young men had last been seen on the night of Dec. 23.

The employee, who was not authorized to be quoted by name, identified the dead American as 18-year-old Alexis Uriel Marron.

Prosecutors are looking into robbery as a possible motive because none of the men's possessions were found in the car. But the area has also been the scene of bloody turf battles between drug gangs. The Knights Templar and Jalisco New Generation cartels are believed to be active in the area.

Marron was a student at Rolling Meadows High School in suburban Chicago and had relatives throughout the area. Marron's cousin, Danila Zendejas, told Chicago television station WLS that she considered him to be a brother.

"He loved his nieces," she said. "And he didn't have time to get to know one of them, to see her grow."

U.S. State Department spokesman Noel Clay said the agency was working with embassy officials to get more information. Mexican Consulate officials in Chicago said they were aware of reports of Marron's death and were ready to help family if requested.

A memorial service for Marron was planned Tuesday evening in his home town of Rolling Meadows.

The U.S. Embassy in Mexico City said in an email message that it was aware of reports that Marron had been killed, but was working to get more information.

The other two victims were identified as Mexican men aged 21 and 24. All three were from, or had family in, the nearby village of Quiringuicharo, Michoacan. Their bodies were found on a two-lane road near the border with Jalisco state.

Earlier in December, two other bodies were found in a burned-out vehicle on the same stretch of road. The victims have been identified as two Mexico City residents, but there was no immediate information on the motive in those killings either.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/mexico/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111228/ap_on_re_la_am_ca/lt_mexico_us_teen_killed

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Trial ordered for accused killer of Washington Township pair

A Ligonier man will head to trial on charges that he killed a couple inside the Washington Township house they lived in this summer, a judge ruled today.

Police arrested Eric Hall, 29, of Church Street, earlier this month for fatally shooting and beating Anthony Henderson, 24, and for fatally shooting Noelle Richards, also 24, inside the home at 292 Fox Road in August.

Mr. Hall is due to appear for formal arraignment in the Westmoreland County Court of Common Pleas at 9 a.m. on Feb. 15. He is charged with criminal homicide, first degree murder, robbery, theft, aggravated assault and two firearms violations.

Three men who knew the couple told police in Westmoreland County that they tried to visit the couple shortly before 9 p.m. Aug. 28 and a man wielding a baseball bat came to the door and attacked them, according to a criminal complaint.

Two other acquaintances told police they went to see the couple shortly after 9 p.m. and found their bloodied bodies inside the house.

According to the complaint, a review of cell phone records led police to suspect that the couple was alive about 12 minutes before the bat-wielding man, later identified by witnesses as Mr. Hall, was seen at the house.

Liz Navratil: lnavratil@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1438

First published on December 28, 2011 at 4:56 pm

Source: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/11362/1199873-100.stm?cmpid=news.xml

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Esther Wojcicki: Give Yourself A Free University Education at University of the People

Here is a Christmas-Hannukah gift you can give yourself, a loved one, a friend, or the world---A university education online for free. Is this some kind of trick?

Nope, it isn't a trick. It is a new university called University of the People (appropriately named) but the degrees are limited in scope right now since the University is fairly new. But the important ones are there.

It is the world's first tuition-free online academic institution dedicated to the global advancement and democratization of higher education.

Just go to their website and check it out for yourself.

The vision of University of the People is that "universal access to education is a key to world peace and global economic development." I agree and I am sure most people would.

Their program is all online. In the U.S., approximately 4 million students are currently enrolled in online education many of them in University of Phoenix, a for profit institution that has a large variety of course offerings, but it is expensive. On the other hand, University of the People provides an unprecedented tuition-free online academic experience to a worldwide-audience.

So far they offer four degree programs. All of these degrees are in areas where there is job growth---business administration and computer science. In the U.S. we have hundreds of computer science jobs that go unfilled each year. We need more computer science majors to meet our technological needs worldwide. We need businesspeople to be entrepreneurs and start new businesses.

For those who are job hunting, you might want to consider signing up for one of these courses They are accessible on your computer at home for free. No commuting, no travel expenses. It is right there on your desk.

Here are the four degrees offered at the University of the People:
1)Associate (A.S.-B.A.) and 2) Bachelor (B.S.-B.A.) degrees in Business Administration
3)Associate (A.S.-C.S.) and 4) Bachelor (B.S.-C.S.) degrees in Computer Science.

How can University of the People offer degrees for free? It is a non-profit organization and it accepts donations; these donations support many of the students. The University is supported by companies, foundations and individuals. Some students pay the low fees.

Presently, it has 300 students from 50 countries around the world. It costs just $4,000K for a student to go to the university for four years. Compare that with the tuition costs of $100,000 for four years at many universities.

The founder Shai Reshef understands the education world. He is an experienced entrepreneur who was Chairman of the Kidum Group a for-profit educational services company which he later sold to Kaplan, one of the world's largest education companies and a subsidiary of the Washington Post. Business Week recently wrote an article about Shai and the university.

Those who would like to support a student at the University of the People, can donate online. Any amount is welcome and it is tax deductible. Imagine being able to change someone's life for the better. Turns out that it would cost only $6 million to educate everyone in the world at University of the People, according to Shai. Not much when you consider how much we spend on just defense.

For those of you who want give yourself a gift of a degree, go online and fill out an application to enroll. It is an exciting opportunity and the time of year to be giving.

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Follow Esther Wojcicki on Twitter: www.twitter.com/EstherWojcicki

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/esther-wojcicki/give-yourself-a-free-univ_b_1168585.html

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Dropbox It, Get Directions, Fill Your Bag, and Running Moonshine [Video]

Dropbox shot up to version 2.0 and got some amazing features. You can finally figure out which app has the best turn-by-turn directions. Run moonshine on the bayou in a high-speed fan boat, and I bet you've always wanted to be a bag boy.
More »


Source: http://feeds.gawker.com/~r/gizmodo/full/~3/HiTlpjBBxNY/

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ANCALERTS: A California family is answering a little girl's 'air note' to Santa after it traveled 700 miles by balloon: http://t.co/XiQQE1T9 | via @AP

Twitter / ABS-CBN News Channel: A California family is ans ... Loader A California family is answering a little girl's 'air note' to Santa after it traveled 700 miles by balloon: | via @

Source: http://twitter.com/ANCALERTS/statuses/150424348782628865

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Army Specialist back home in E. Texas for the holidays

HENDERSON, TX (KLTV)-

An East Texas soldier is home from Iraq after a year-long tour.

Army Specialist Dedrick Walker was a part of the last groups of US troops to deploy for Iraq back in October 2010.

He's also a part of the last groups to come home from Iraq for good.

Walker says it is good to be home this Christmas--and many more to come.

Military roots run deep in the walker family.

It's evident Bishop L.J. Guillory, Dedrick's father, is proud.

The latest edition to the long line of servicemen is his 23-year-old son, Army Specialist Dedrick Walker.

Dedrick is home for Christmas. Home now, for good.

"He is the biggest present that we have for Christmas," says Guillory, "And his brother and I are just happy, just elated to have him here."

Dedrick's father and dozens of others welcomed him home Sunday, after he served a year in Iraq.
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Dedrick served as a Preventive Medicine Specialist, helping make the drinking water and living conditions safe for our troops.

He says he helped the Iraqis develop a better quality of life.

His work in Iraq earned him a bronze star.

Dedrick explains that he inspected Iraqi compounds, taught classes, and gave tips to the locals.

Last Christmas morning he was serving overseas. Dedrick says it was then he missed some of the little things, "Just this house, you know, I really missed it. So, I'm not looking for any gifts or anything like that. It's just being around the people I love."

Guillory says, "He is my present from God. My son and I, he is our present from God. That's the biggest present that God could have given me. Santa Claus, St. Nick, all those guys they just don't know. This is the best Christmas I've ever had.

Specialist Walker will attend SFA in the fall, where he will study psychology.

He says he wants to help soldiers cope with mental health issues.

Copyright 2011 KLTV. All rights reserved.

Source: http://henderson.kltv.com/news/news/75851-army-specialist-back-home-e-texas-holidays

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Wisconsin Coalition for Cancer Treatment Access: Legislative support continues to grow for oral chemotherapy access: Bill is most bi-partisan of the session

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Source: http://www.wispolitics.com/1006/111222_WCCTA.pdf

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Romney Swipes at Gingrich, Serves Pasta (ABC News)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories News, RSS and RSS Feed via Feedzilla.

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The Most Memorable Spaceflight Stories of 2011 (SPACE.com)

This year was quite an eventful one in spaceflight, with many vessels launching toward the heavens ? and a few crashing back to Earth.

Here's a rundown of the top 11 spaceflight stories of 2011, from the last mission of NASA's venerable space shuttle program to China's first-ever docking of two spaceships in Earth orbit:

1. Satellites falling from the sky

The sky wasn't really falling in autumn 2011; it just seemed that way, with two defunct satellites plummeting to Earth out of control within a month of each other.

First came NASA's Upper Atmosphere Research Satellite, or UARS. This 6.5-ton climate satellite, which was about the size of a school bus, launched in 1991 and was decommissioned in 2005. UARS then spent six years spiraling slowly toward our planet, finally plunging into the atmosphere above the Pacific Ocean Sept. 24.

Germany's 2.7-ton Roentgen Satellite, or ROSAT, followed closely on UARS' heels. This craft, which launched in 1990 to survey the heavens in X-rays and was shut down in 1999, fell back to Earth over the Indian Ocean Oct. 23.?

Neither satellite crash injured anyone. But the sky isn't done raining down huge pieces of space junk. Russia's failed Mars probe Phobos-Grunt will soon plummet to Earth, perhaps even before the year is out (see below). [Vote for the Best Spaceflight Story of 2011]

2. The end of the space shuttle era

This year also saw the last flight of an American icon. NASA's storied space shuttle program came to an end after 30 years of service when Atlantis touched down shortly before dawn July 21.

Atlantis' flight was the 135th space mission for the shuttle program, which began to take shape in 1972 and first launched to orbit in 1981. The shuttle accomplished a great deal during its long lifetime, helping to build the International Space Station and making spaceflight more routine than it had been.

However, the shuttle's record highlights that spaceflight remains a dangerous endeavor. Two of its 135 missions ended in tragedy, killing a total of 14 astronauts. The shuttle Challenger exploded shortly after liftoff in 1986, while Columbia broke up during re-entry in 2003. [NASA's Space Shuttle Program in Pictures: A Tribute]

The three remaining space-flown orbiters are now being prepped for display in museums. For now, NASA is dependent on Russian Soyuz vehicles to ferry its astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit. However, the agency hopes private companies can take over this orbital taxi service by 2017 or so.

3. A space first for China

Nov. 2 was a banner day for China and its space program. On that date, the nation successfully docked two robotic spacecraft in low-Earth orbit for the first time ever.

The mating of the two vehicles ? called?Shenzhou 8 and Tiangong 1?? was designed to test key technologies that China will use to assemble a space station in orbit. The country hopes to have a 66-ton manned station up and running by 2020.

And China won't rest on its laurels for long. The nation plans to launch two more docking missions during 2012, at least one of which will be manned.

4. 50 years of human spaceflight

The space shuttle program celebrated 30 years of spaceflight in 2011, but that anniversary took a back seat to a much bigger one this year: 50 years of human spaceflight.

Yuri Gagarin became the first person in space April 12, 1961, completing one Earth orbit in his tiny Vostok capsule before returning safely to terra firma less than two hours later. The United States launched its first spaceflyer just weeks later, sending Alan Shepard on a short suborbital flight May 5.

And the anniversaries didn't stop there. On May 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy made the speech that charted NASA's direction for years to come, announcing that the United States would put an astronaut on the moon before the end of the decade.

So while our future may be in the stars, this year spurred many spaceflight experts and observers to cast their gaze back through history.

5. The astronaut and the congresswoman

On Jan. 8, a gunman shot Arizona congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords in the head as she talked to constituents outside a Tucson grocery store. The attack left Giffords gravely wounded and six other people dead.

The tragedy reverberated beyond Arizona and the halls of Congress, reaching into low-Earth orbit. Giffords' husband, Mark Kelly, was slated to command the STS-134 mission of the space shuttle Endeavour ? the second-to-last flight of the shuttle program ? just a few months after the shooting.

As Giffords made strides in her recovery, Kelly decided to take part in the mission. When Endeavour blasted off from Florida's Kennedy Space Center May 16, Giffords was in the crowd.

Kelly retired in October with four spaceflights under his belt. Giffords continues to recuperate, and she's said she may consider a return to Congress if her condition improves enough.

6. NASA's uncertain future

In many ways, NASA had a great year in 2011. The agency launched three different planetary missions, rendezvoused with the huge asteroid Vesta and executed a comet flyby. And NASA's Kepler space telescope discovered more than 2,000 potential alien planets.

But the year also brought its share of transition and uncertainty. With the space shuttle fleet retired, NASA is now completely dependent on Russian Soyuz vehicles to ferry its astronauts to and from the International Space Station, at $63 million per seat. NASA wants American private spaceflight companies to take over this taxi service soon, but that probably won't happen until 2017 at the earliest, officials have said.

NASA's budget also keeps getting trimmed, as lawmakers look to cut federal spending across the board. The agency may get just $17.4 billion in fiscal year 2012, down from $18.5 billion in 2011.

The belt-tightening could threaten some of the agency's most ambitious and expensive projects, including the $8.8-billion James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). In July, the House Appropriations Committee recommended canceling the huge instrument, which is billed as the muscular successor to NASA's Hubble Space Telescope.

Congress later restored funding for JWST, marking it as safe ? for now. The telescope is slated to launch in October 2018.

7. NASA's new rocket and spaceship

In 2010, President Barack Obama instructed NASA to work toward getting astronauts to an asteroid by 2025 and to Mars by the mid-2030s. This year, the space agency laid out how it plans to reach these deep-space destinations.

The astronauts will ride aboard a new spaceship called the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle, which NASA announced in May. The spacecraft is based heavily on the old Orion capsule concept, which NASA began developing as part of its moon-oriented Constellation program. The Obama Administration cancelled Constellation last year in favor of the asteroid-first plan.

In September, NASA revealed its Space Launch System (SLS), the $10-billion giant rocket that will lift Orion off the pad. In its early incarnations, the SLS will likely be capable of lofting 70 tons of payload, but NASA eventually wants to beef it up to carry 130 tons of material to space.

NASA hopes the Orion-SLS combo will be launching astronauts toward deep space by 2021.

8. Russia's space woes

2011 was a tough year for Russian spaceflight, as a string of high-profile mishaps plagued the country.

On Feb. 1, for example, a Rockot launch vehicle failed to deliver an Earth-observing satellite to the proper orbit. And on Aug. 18, a Proton rocket didn't place a $300-million communications satellite in the desired orbit.

Then, on Aug. 24, the unmanned Progress 44 supply ship crashed while hauling cargo to the International Space Station, doomed by a problem with the third stage of its Soyuz rocket. Russia uses a similar version of the Soyuz to launch astronauts to the space station, so manned flights were put on hold until the problem with the rocket could be identified and fixed. As a result, the orbiting lab operated with a skeleton crew of three astronauts for a stretch this autumn.

Finally, the $165-million Mars moon probe Phobos-Grunt got stuck in Earth orbit shortly after its Nov. 8 launch. The spacecraft's thrusters were supposed to fire to send it on a course for the Red Planet, but they never did so.

Phobos-Grunt is still circling our planet, its orbit getting lower and lower by the day. Most experts consider the probe lost, predicting that it will come crashing back into the atmosphere in mid-January, though it's tough to peg an exact date. [Photos: Russia's Failed Phobos-Grunt Mission]

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev recently threatened heavy fines or even criminal punishment for the people responsible for this series of embarrassing failures.

9. International Space Station is complete

After 13 years of construction work, the International Space Station finally reached a measure of completeness in 2011.

In March, the space shuttle Discovery delivered NASA's final contribution to the assembly of the orbiting lab, a new room called the Permanent Multipurpose Module. While Russia may attach one more module in the coming years, construction from a U.S. standpoint is now 100-percent done.

NASA and its international partners began building the orbiting lab in 1998. The 431-ton space station is as big as a football field and has about as much living space as a five-bedroom house. With an estimated price tag of $100 billion, the orbital outpost is the most expensive structure ever built.

10. NASA launches its biggest Mars rover

NASA launched its own Mars mission Nov. 26, less than three weeks after Russia's left the pad. But unlike Phobos-Grunt, the $2.5-billion Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission is speeding toward the Red Planet, apparently in perfect health.

MSL will drop the car-size Curiosity rover at Mars' huge Gale Crater in August 2012, using a rocket-powered sky crane to lower the robot to the planet's surface. Curiosity's main task is to assess whether the Gale Crater area is, or ever was, capable of supporting microbial life. [Photos: NASA's Curiosity Rover Launches to Mars]

The 1-ton rover carries 10 instruments to help it answer this question, including a rock-zapping laser and equipment designed to identify organic compounds ? carbon-based molecules that are the building blocks of life as we know it.

11. Private spaceflight makes strides

A private space race is developing among companies that hope to ferry NASA astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit in the post-shuttle era, and 2011 saw that race heat up.

Several different companies made strides this year in their spacecraft development, ticking off key milestones that NASA laid out for them as a condition of continued funding. The chief contenders ? firms such as Blue Origin, SpaceX, Boeing and Sierra Nevada ? generally say they should be ready to fly by 2015 or 2016.

Private suborbital spaceflight also made progress this year. The space tourism company Virgin Galactic conducted more glide tests of its SpaceShipTwo vehicle, and company officials have said that in-vehicle rocket tests should start in the first half of 2012.

During commercial operations, SpaceShipTwo will take off from Spaceport America, and this commercial facility really began taking shape in 2011. Further, scientists put money down on the research potential of suborbital spaceflight this year, buying seats on SpaceShipTwo and XCOR Aerospace's Lynx vehicle.

You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/space/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/space/20111221/sc_space/themostmemorablespaceflightstoriesof2011

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A medical miracle poses ethical dilemma

Only 24 weeks into her pregnancy, Haydee Ibarra's doctors told her that her baby wasn't getting the blood and oxygen she needed to survive.

If she stayed inside the womb, the baby would certainly die. If she was born, her chances weren't much better and she could face a lifetime of health complications.

Ibarra, 22, and Yovani Guido, 24, implored the doctors to do everything possible to save their daughter. And they did.

On Aug. 30, Melinda Guido was born four months premature at Los Angeles County/USC Medical Center. She weighed just over 9 ounces ?the smallest baby ever born in California and the second smallest in the United States.

"It was scary," Ibarra told reporters Thursday outside the hospital. "Everybody was telling me the same thing: that she wasn't going to be able to make it, that she was too tiny."

Melinda is now four pounds, one ounce. But her future is uncertain. And the decision to employ all the technological innovations available to save her life has raised ethical questions no one can answer.

Should doctors intervene with medications, surgeries and heroic efforts to save babies who may face lifelong health problems ? if they live at all? And who should make the call, given the large costs that can fall on the public?

"We are in uncharted territory," said Dr. Rangasamy Ramanathan, chief of the neonatology section at the county hospital. "It's very difficult to say if this baby is going to be normal."

In the short term, Melinda risks infection and bleeding in the brain. In the long term, she could suffer cerebral palsy and cognitive and physical delays.

Melinda was just 270 grams at birth--the size of a soda can. When a baby is that small, doctors say it is anybody's guess what will happen. There is little research about long-term survival. Doctors across the nation often let babies weighing less than 400 grams die, Ramanathan said.

"At what point do you draw the line?" said William Benitz, chief of neonatology at Packard Children's Hospital and Stanford Medical School. "We don't have a social or political consensus as to what we should do."

Doctors and families make the decision together, he said, with an understanding of the serious health risks the baby could face. And some parents decide not to take extreme measures.

"There are a range of value judgments that come to bear. It's not a right or wrong," he said. "We do try to advise the family that even though the baby may survive, survival doesn't mean the baby will survive intact."

Caring for infants born so prematurely is costly. Ibarra, a cashier at a restaurant, and Guido, a cook, live in Granada Hills and said they were insured by Medi-Cal, the public insurance program for the poor.

Melinda's care will cost the state and the county as much as half a million dollars, Ramanathan estimated. "I don't know if I can put cost to life.? It's worth it," he said.

Ramanathan said he was "cautiously optimistic" about Melinda's prospects, after medical tests showed that she was developing normally. But it is too early to tell. Doctors will monitor her condition for six years.

"The most important thing for me is not just survival," Ramanathan said, "it's quality of life."

Ibarra, who has high blood pressure and a kidney disease, knew her pregnancy would be high risk. Despite close monitoring by doctors, her baby didn't grow nearly as fast as she needed to. Ibarra went in for a checkup in late August at her local county hospital, Olive View Medical Center. Doctors discovered the imminent danger to the baby and transferred Ibarra to Los Angeles County/USC Medical Center.

Melinda was born by C-section and hooked to machines and tubes that kept her alive.

For two months, she was too sick for her parents to hold her.

When Guido finally did, he was extremely nervous. She was so delicate, he recalled, that he worried about accidentally fracturing her bones. "When you lift her up, you don't want to lift her up in the wrong way," he said.

Ibarra said she was just happy. "There are no words to be said ? it was just love," she said.

Guido calls Melinda his miracle baby and said he has faith in her. He sees the day when he can take her to the park. "She's a fighter," he said.

"No doubt about that. She's a fighter."

anna.gorman@latimes.com

Source: http://feeds.latimes.com/~r/latimes/news/science/~3/tzVIzJ44Mlg/la-me-small-baby-story-20111216,0,4725588.story

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U.S. Navy may station ships in Singapore, Philippines (reuters)

Share With Friends: Share on FacebookTweet ThisPost to Google-BuzzSend on GmailPost to Linked-InSubscribe to This Feed | Rss To Twitter | Politics - Top Stories Stories, News Feeds and News via Feedzilla.

Source: http://news.feedzilla.com/en_us/stories/politics/top-stories/175375834?client_source=feed&format=rss

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Chimpanzees in research: Statement on Institute of Medicine report by NIH Director Francis Collins

ScienceDaily (Dec. 15, 2011) ? The following is a statement by NIH Director Dr. Francis Collins on the Institute of Medicine report addressing the scientific need for the use of chimpanzees in research:

The use of animals in research has enabled scientists to identify new ways to treat illness, extend life, and improve health and well-being. Chimpanzees are our closest relatives in the animal kingdom, providing exceptional insights into human biology and the need for special consideration and respect. While used very selectively and in limited numbers for medical research, chimpanzees have served an important role in advancing human health in the past. However, new methods and technologies developed by the biomedical community have provided alternatives to the use of chimpanzees in several areas of research.

In December 2010, the National Institutes of Health commissioned a study by the Institute of Medicine to assess whether chimpanzees are or will be necessary for biomedical and behavioral research. The IOM now has issued its findings, with a primary recommendation that the use of chimpanzees in research be guided by a set of principles and criteria. The committee proposed three principles to analyze current and potential future research using chimpanzees.

  1. That the knowledge gained must be necessary to advance the public's health;
  2. There must be no other research model by which the knowledge could be obtained, and the research cannot be ethically performed human on subjects; and
  3. The animals used in the proposed research must be maintained either in ethologically appropriate physical and social environments (i.e., as would occur in their natural environment) or in natural habitats.

Based on its deliberations, the IOM committee concluded that "while the chimpanzee has been a valuable animal model in past research, most current use of chimpanzees for biomedical research is unnecessary." The committee also concluded, however, that the following areas may continue to require the use of chimpanzees: some ongoing research on monoclonal antibody therapies, research on comparative genomics, and non-invasive studies of social and behavioral factors that affect the development, prevention, or treatment of disease. The committee was unable to reach consensus on the necessity of the chimpanzee for the development of prophylactic hepatitis C virus vaccine. While the committee encouraged NIH to continue development of non-chimpanzee models and technologies, it acknowledged that new, emerging, or re-emerging diseases may present challenges that may require the use of chimpanzees.

I have considered the report carefully and have decided to accept the IOM committee recommendations. NIH is in the process of developing a complete plan for implementation of the IOM's guiding principles and criteria. I will be assembling a working group within the NIH Council of Councils to provide advice on the implementation of the recommendations, and to consider the size and placement of the active and inactive populations of NIH-owned or -supported chimpanzees. We will not issue any new awards for research involving chimpanzees until processes for implementing the recommendations are in place.

NIH is committed to conducting and supporting high-quality science in the interest of advancing public health, and to the humane care and use of animals used in NIH research. I am grateful to the IOM for their careful and thoughtful assessment of this important and sensitive topic.

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Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/~3/hYat97Uy_Nk/111215145719.htm

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Olympus meets deadline for revised earnings report (AP)

TOKYO ? Olympus Corp. submitted revised earnings reports Wednesday, meeting a deadline to avoid being removed from the Tokyo Stock Exchange. It still risks getting delisted later on because of an accounting scandal.

The piles of documents for the reports dating back five years were accepted by financial regulators three hours before the deadline expired.

The Tokyo bourse has the final say in deciding whether to boot out the once prestigious Japanese camera and medical equipment maker, and is still investigating the company's dubious accounting.

The deception at Olympus, dating back to the 1990s, to hide 117.7 billion yen ($1.5 billion) in investment losses came to light when former President and Chief Executive Michael Woodford blew the whistle, questioning expensive acquisitions and exorbitant fees for financial advice.

Woodford, a 51-year-old Briton and a rare foreigner to lead a major Japanese company, was fired in October after confronting Olympus directors.

He returned to Japan this week to meet with investors and lawmakers and to try to lead a turnaround at Olympus. Last month, he visited to meet police and other investigators.

Woodford has said he wants to fix Olympus and has expressed hopes shareholders will back him. Woodford has also repeatedly said that he hopes Olympus will not be delisted.

Olympus did not have an immediate comment. President Shuichi Takayama has scheduled a news conference Thursday to go over the earnings filings. Olympus has said the cover-up losses were recouped over the years.

The company reported in its corrected documentation a loss of 32.3 billion yen ($414 million) for the first half of the fiscal year, through September, a reversal from a 3.8 billion yen profit the same period a year earlier.

Takayama, who took helm after the scandal broke, has said Woodford lacks the right teamwork style to lead the company, although now acknowledges the positive side of Woodford's whistleblowing. Olympus initially denied any wrongdoing and lambasted Woodford.

It is still unclear if Woodford will manage a comeback. Some people, such as former board member Koji Miyata, see him as a hero and have begun an online campaign to bring back Woodford. A date has not yet been set for a general shareholders meeting.

The scandal has prompted soul-searching in Japan Inc. on living up to global standards in governance.

Some experts say laws need to be updated, corporate boards needs more outside members and transparency needs to be strengthened. Ruling and opposition legislators met with Woodford to hear his ideas about better corporate practices.

No one has been charged in the scandal. But Olympus management has said several top company men were involved in the scheme and has promised to investigate 70 officials, including former and current executives and auditors, to pursue possible criminal charges.

A third-party panel set up by Olympus, including a former Japanese Supreme Court judge, released the findings of an investigation earlier this month, which said top executives who were "rotten to the core" had orchestrated the accounting cover-up spanning three decades.

The fees for financial advice and overvalued acquisitions were part of an elaborate deception utilizing overseas banks and several funds to keep the massive losses off the company's books, according to Olympus.

Japanese magazine Facta was first to report the dubious money.

Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, who was behind Woodford's appointment as chief executive and later his firing, has since resigned as chairman. He is among several executives suspected of knowing about the scheme.

Last month, Olympus dismissed Executive Vice President Hisashi Mori, saying he was involved in the cover-up along with Kikukawa. A company auditor also resigned.

Olympus stock plunged after the scandal broke but has since recouped some of those losses. It slipped 4.1 percent to 1,314 yen in Tokyo on Wednesday.

___

Follow Yuri Kageyama on Twitter at http://twitter.com/yurikageyama

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/earnings/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111214/ap_on_bi_ge/as_japan_olympus

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Gaming's New Frontier After Zynga - Joseph Walker - News ...

In July of 2009, David Reid got a call from a recruiter who wanted to gauge his interest in joining a little-known start-up called Trion Worlds Inc. A gaming company founded a couple of years earlier by Lars Buttler, a former Electronic Arts executive, Trion had yet to release a product.

Trion, however, was said to be doing something big in the realm of massively multiplayer online games, or MMO, where players connected by the Internet do battle in fantastical virtual universes. Reid, a gregarious man whose short hair is the only indication of his past life as a U.S. Army lieutenant, had seen how social networks and smartphones were revolutionizing gaming, and he was interested in trying something new. But unlike some of his peers, Reid, 42, didn?t want to make these so-called casual games that were so often used to kill time while waiting on line at the grocery store.

Read the rest of this post on the original site ?

Source: http://allthingsd.com/20111214/gamings-new-frontier-after-zynga/

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UN chief to open ministers level at climate talks (AP)

DURBAN, South Africa ? The U.N. Environment Program chief says a treaty on climate change wouldn't be enough to avert a dangerous rise in global temperatures, and countries need to voluntarily make deeper cuts in carbon emissions.

Achim Steiner spoke Tuesday hours before U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon is due to open the decisive ministerial stage of a two-week 194-nation conference on climate change.

The conference is focusing on efforts to move toward a future agreement to legally bind all nations to emissions targets, including China and the United States.

Steiner presented UNEP's report showing the gap is widening between pledges by nations to reduce greenhouse gases and the targets set by scientists for preventing runaway global warming.

"We are losing time," he said.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/environment/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111206/ap_on_re_af/af_climate_conference

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2010 New York 20th District Race: Democrat Scott Murphy Defends Seat Against Republican Chris Gibson (ContributorNetwork)

Scott Murphy narrowly won a special election in 2009 to replace N.Y. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand in a nail-biter election. Now he's up against Republican Chris Gibson, an Army veteran. It helps that Murphy has been campaigning non-stop, but having voted for the health care bill, he may have made himself a little more vulnerable. However, this race is still leaning in Murphy's direction.

Candidates for New York's 20th Congressional District (two-year term)

(This district includes all or parts of Columbia, Dutchess, Delaware, Essex, Greene, Otsego, Rensselaer, Saratoga, Warren and Washington counties. See a boundary map here.)

Candidate: Scott Murphy

Party: Democrat

Political experience: Before being elected to the House, Murphy was an aide to Democratic governors Mel Carnahan and Roger Wilson. He is currently the incumbent representative for the district.

Professional experience: Murphy founded Small World Software and worked for Advantage Capital Partners, a business that helps other businesses create community jobs.

Key issues: Murphy says that agriculture is important to his district, given that there are more than 4,000 farms there. He introduced the Dairy Relief and Market Stabilization Act to provide short-term support for dairy farmers.

Murphy introduced legislation to increase educational opportunities for veterans, including vocational and flight training as well as apprenticeships. He says on his website that he will always fight to make sure the troops get the resources they need.

Endorsements: Murphy has been endorsed by the Independence Party of New York and Veterans and Military Families for Progress.

Chances of maintaining his seat: According to a Siena College poll from Sept. 17, Murphy holds a commanding lead over Gibson by 17 percentage points, 52 percent to 37 percent. When it comes to money, Murphy has the advantage as well, with $1,452,649 to Gibson's remaining $526,334, according to OpenSecrets.org. This district is leaning toward Murphy's re-election.

Candidate: Chris Gibson

Party: Republican

Political experience: Gibson served as a Congressional Fellow with U.S. Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-CA) and he completed a Hoover National Security Affairs Fellowship at Stanford University.

Professional experience: Gibson taught American politics at the United States Military Academy at West Point. He's the author of "Securing the State", a book on national security decision-making. He spent 24 years in the Army with deployments in Kosovo, the southwestern United States for a counter-drug operation and in Haiti.

Key issues: Gibson is strongly concerned about national security, arguing on his website that the U.S. government must be better able to see enemies to help further U.S. interests with those of American allies. He's a supporter of the Second Amendment and wants to see a national standard for reciprocity, the right to carry a concealed firearm in other states.

He thinks the recent health care bill was a mistake. He suggests the best means of bringing down insurance cost and increasing access are (1) new incentives for cost-conscious consumers of medical services, allowing individuals and families to purchase health insurance out-of-state and (2) state-based as opposed to federal programs for health care reform.

Endorsements: Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani and former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney are backing Chris Gibson.

Chances of unseating Scott Murphy: Gibson is in a district with more Republicans than Democrats, but he's in an uphill battle due to a significant monetary disadvantage. Polls aren't on his side either.

Key Differences between Chris Gibson and Scott Murphy

Jobs: Murphy wants limited government to stay out of the way to help create an environment that grows jobs. He would see investment in infrastructure, education, energy and small business and agriculture. Gibson also acknowledges this election is about the economy and that increased spending is the wrong way to go. He'd like to lower taxes, streamline regulations and lower health care costs to bring jobs back to New York.

Fiscal responsibility: Gibson is concerned that if the budget isn't balanced and soon it will limit the choices of future generations. He wants to streamline regulatory functions and eliminate entire federal agencies to severely curtail spending. Murphy agrees that fiscal restraint needs to be restored and he argues he has voted to reduce wasteful spending. He supported pay-as-you-go rules. He says he has also fought to control Medicare waste, fraud and abuse.

New York's 20th U.S. Congressional District

Location: The New York 20th District includes much of the Hudson Valley and parts of the Catskills and Adirondacks.

2008 results: Democrat Kirsten Gillibrand beat Republican Sandy Treadwell 62.1 percent to 37.9 percent.

Demographics: According to the U.S. Census, 92 percent of the district is white, 2.8 percent Asian, 2.3 percent black, 1.3 percent Hispanic and 0.2 percent American Indian and Alaska Native.

The Cook Partisan Index gives the New York 20th District a rating of R+2, awarding a slight edge to Republican voters in this district.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/democrats/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ac/20111206/us_ac/6838824_2010_new_york_20th_district_race_democrat_scott_murphy_defends_seat_against_republican_chris_gibson

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Singer Mindy McCready's 5-year-old son in custody

FILE - In this undated file photo, country singer Mindy McCready performs in Nashville, Tenn. A missing persons report has been filed for McCready and her 5-year-old son Zander. The Department of Children and Families says the report was filed with Cape Coral Police Tuesday night after McCready took Zander from McCready's father's home. McCready doesn't have custody of her son ? her mother does ? and was allowed to visit the boy at her father's home. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, file)

FILE - In this undated file photo, country singer Mindy McCready performs in Nashville, Tenn. A missing persons report has been filed for McCready and her 5-year-old son Zander. The Department of Children and Families says the report was filed with Cape Coral Police Tuesday night after McCready took Zander from McCready's father's home. McCready doesn't have custody of her son ? her mother does ? and was allowed to visit the boy at her father's home. (AP Photo/Mark Humphrey, file)

(AP) ? By the time Arkansas authorities took country singer Mindy McCready's 5-year-old son from her and into custody on Friday evening, one thing had already become apparent to much of America: McCready's life has come to resemble a bad country song.

Since her success in the mid-1990s as a honey-voiced success story out of Nashville, McCready has been increasingly known for her personal foibles instead of her music.

This week's custody battle was the latest in a long saga of personal heartache and brushes with the law.

Florida Department of Children and Families spokeswoman Terri Durdaller said in an email Friday night that her agency was working with Arkansas state officials to bring McCready's son, Zander, back to his maternal grandmother in Florida. His grandmother has been his guardian since 2007.

Officials say he's safe and in good health.

Gayle Inge, Zander's grandmother and McCready's mother, was tearful when she talked about the news by phone Friday night with The Associated Press.

"I'm real excited that he's safe," she said. "But I can't explain what this is like. We feel for Mindy and we feel for Zander."

Inge said Zander was taken into custody at McCready's boyfriend's lake home in Arkansas. Inge said that her son ? McCready's half-brother ? texted McCready, who responded with a text that said her mother would never see her again.

"I want to wrap my arms around her and tell her that I love her," Inge said, adding that her daughter and grandson were found by authorities "hiding in a closet."

McCready, who turned 36 on Wednesday, did not respond to emails late Friday.

The evening's developments capped a days-long struggle between McCready ? who is seven months pregnant with twins ? and several others, including state of Florida child welfare authorities, a Fort Myers, Fla. judge and her own mother.

Authorities say McCready took the boy during a visit late last month to her father's Florida home, where she was allowed to visit the boy. McCready's parents are divorced.

A Florida judge signed an order Thursday telling authorities to take the boy into custody and return him. It's not yet clear whether the singer could face criminal charges.

McCready said earlier in the week that she would not bring her son back from Tennessee, where she has a home, despite violating the custody arrangement. She told the AP that her son had suffered abuse at her mother's house, a claim that Inge vehemently denies.

"I'm doing all this to protect Zander, not stay out of trouble," McCready wrote in an email to the AP on Thursday. "I don't think I should be in trouble for protecting my son in the first place."

McCready told the AP Wednesday night she was in Tennessee and couldn't travel because she is pregnant with twins.

The boy's father, Billy McKnight, told NBC's "Today" show Friday he spoke on the phone with McCready and their boy after the judge's 5 p.m. EST Thursday deadline expired.

"He did sound healthy and ok. He wasn't crying or scared," McKnight said about their son.

"I think she believes she has a case and doesn't realize she's pushing her luck on this one," he said.

McCready and her mother have had a long custody battle over the boy, who was living with McCready's mother.

"We can confirm that Zander has been taken into custody and we are working with Arkansas state officials to bring him back to his legal guardian in Florida," Durdaller wrote late Friday. "He is safe and in good health.

McCready had provided a series of emails to the AP with Lee County Judge James Seals' ruling to return the boy.

"Mom has violated the court's custody order and we are simply restoring the child back into our custody," the judge wrote. "Nothing more. Nothing less. The court makes no judgment about whether Mom will or will not competently care for the child while in her custody. It only wants the child back where the court placed him."

McCready found fame in the mid-1990s when she moved to Nashville at the age of 18, armed with only her karaoke tapes. Her first album, "Ten Thousand Angels," sold two million copies.

Her next four albums weren't as successful. Her personal troubles began encroaching on her professional success. According to her website, she suffers from severe depression.

McCready fought the release of a tape in which she reportedly talked about former Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees pitcher Roger Clemens, with whom she had an affair as a teenager.

In August, she filed a libel suit against her mother and the National Enquirer's parent company, American Media Inc., over a story published in the tabloid newspaper that quoted Inge.

And in 2008, McCready was admitted to a hospital after police said she cut her wrists and took several pills in a suicide attempt.

During the TV show "Celebrity Rehab 3" in 2010, McCready came off as a sympathetic figure, and host Dr. Drew Pinsky called her an angel in the season finale.

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Associated Press

Source: http://hosted2.ap.org/APDEFAULT/386c25518f464186bf7a2ac026580ce7/Article_2011-12-03-People-McCready/id-0d0c2180ea67424d88e487b861b73bf9

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